Floods kill 70 in southern China

By The Associated Press
| 10:14 p.m.May 10, 2010

In this photo taken Thursday May 6, 2010, villagers comb the remains of a house collapsed by a flash flood in Shuiche township of Xinhua county in south China's Hunan province. Heavy rain and wind swept across southern China, damaging thousands of houses and killing dozens. (AP Photo)
— AP

In this photo taken Thursday May 6, 2010, villagers comb the remains of a house collapsed by a flash flood in Shuiche township of Xinhua county in south China's Hunan province. Heavy rain and wind swept across southern China, damaging thousands of houses and killing dozens. (AP Photo)
/ AP

Flooding caused by the heavy rains - which started a month earlier than normal - damaged more than 80,000 homes and damaging large swaths of cropland, affecting more than 10 million people across 13 provinces and cities, the State Flood Control and Disaster Relief Headquarters said on its website.

"South China has already entered its flood season, one month earlier than in past years. The biggest floods have yet to come," Sun Jun of the National Meteorological Center was cited as saying by the official Xinhua News Agency.

The areas include the provinces of Guangdong, Chongqing, Sichuan, Fujian, Jiangxi, Hunan and Zhejiang.

Sun said the extreme rains were caused by El Nino, which has linked hot, wet air from southern China with cooler air traveling south from northern China, according to Xinhua.

In some areas, such as Guangdong province, the thunderstorms have cut power lines, toppled homes and bridges, submerged roads and caused rivers to overflow, forcing the relocation of 145,000 people in less than a week, Xinhua said.

China's huge land mass means severe storms can cause floods in one region, while other parts of the country experience droughts.

Earlier this year, farmers in Yunnan and Guizhou were hit by the worst drought in a century. The drought, which has begun to subside as the region enters its rainy season, affected 61 million people, leaving millions without drinking water and ruining more than 10 million acres (4 million hectares) of crops.